IT was meant to be a conference for an “Unstoppable Generation.” But by the time the altars quietened and the last prayer was lifted, what had unfolded at the University of Ibadan’s International Conference Centre surpassed every programme note.

From left, Pastor Alonge, Evang. Mike-Bamiloye and Pastor Oyor at the event
Last Saturday, the much-anticipated Hope for Me Conference 2026, organised by the Pastor Eben Alonge’s David’s Court Ministries in conjunction with David’s Court Global Leadership Academy and Eyes of Compassion Foundation held
at the Thomas Hall venue.

Organisers had billed it as a day of word exposition, breakout sessions, and leadership impartation. But attendees left with far more than notes and inspiration.
In a post-event thanksgiving address, the 3G Team (Groan, Go, Give) reported a catalogue of supernatural occurrences that have since become the talk of Ibadan’s Christian community.

According to the team led by the Lead Pastor of David’s Court Ministries, Eben Alonge, 11 deaf ears were opened during the conference. Beneficiaries, who had reportedly struggled with hearing loss for years, were said to have responded to sound for the first time during the ministration session.
In another remarkable incident, a young attendee with blurred vision received clarity after prayer, with organisers confirming that one previously blurry eye “saw clearly” by the close of the event.
But the numbers that have stunned even veteran observers involve conversions. The foundation disclosed that 1,063 people gave their lives to Christ at the summit — a figure that includes several Muslim attendees who reportedly made decisions for faith in Jesus.

“Mighty outpouring of fresh baptism and deliverance over hundreds of people,” Alonge wrote in a thanksgiving message. “Ultimately, Jesus was glorified!”
The conference featured heavyweights such as Pastor Godswill Oyor, Evangelist Damilola Mike Bamiloye of Mount Zion Faith Productions, songs minstrel Ambassador Sola Solagbade, legal luminary Barrister Louis Akanmo, and Pastor Godswill Oyor.
Breakout sessions included Rev Paul Olu Oni, who spoke on “Sexual Purity Among Young People”; Princess Adetoun Agboola, who addressed “Being an Unstoppable Girl-Child”; and Rev Solomon Olayiwola, who led a session on “Evangelism by Fire Among Young People.”

With these deliberately structured breakouts, which addressed sensitive youth issues, the organisers admitted that the spiritual harvest far exceeded expectations.
“This was a real time of overflow,” the 3G Team added, expressing gratitude to everyone who supported through prayer, logistics, and financial giving.
As news of the weekend’s events continues to spread across Oyo State and beyond, one thing is evident: the “Unstoppable Generation” left Ibadan not just empowered, but, for many, utterly transformed.











